Netflix Weighs Always-On Channels, Bundles and Short-Form Video
Netflix is examining a broader product shift as viewing engagement softens, including genre-based linear channels, third-party subscriptions, live programming and partnerships with digital publishers. Its integration of TF1 live channels in France is already operating.
Netflix is considering a substantial expansion of its on-demand model, weighing always-on genre channels, bundled subscriptions to other streaming services, more live programming and short-form video as it seeks to keep viewers watching more often and for longer.
The central problem is engagement.
The service remains profitable and retains major global franchises, but its share of United States television viewing has weakened as YouTube, Disney, HBO Max, free ad-supported platforms and other services compete for attention.
Some prominent Netflix series have also seen viewership fall sharply from their first seasons to their second, increasing pressure to make the service feel less like a library that requires endless choices and more like a destination that is ready to watch.
One proposal under examination is a set of continuously running channels organized by genre or programming theme.
Such channels would offer scheduled viewing around the clock, allowing members to enter a stream rather than select a specific title.
The approach would mark a conspicuous departure from Netflix's long-standing emphasis on viewer control, personalized recommendation and on-demand choice.
Netflix has already moved beyond a purely on-demand catalogue in France.
Since June, subscribers there have been able to watch live channels and on-demand programming from the French broadcaster TF1 within Netflix, including its rolling news channel.
The arrangement places third-party programming inside Netflix's search, recommendation and viewing features and provides a working test of whether scheduled television can strengthen the service's role in daily viewing habits.
Live programming is also becoming more important to the company's strategy.
Netflix holds exclusive United States rights, including Puerto Rico, for the 2027 and 2031 FIFA Women's World Cups, its first full sports-competition rights agreement.
The company has already used live events to attract large audiences, while sports could give viewers a reason to return at a fixed time rather than watch only when a new series arrives.
A separate expansion begins on August 3, when Netflix is due to add shorter-form programming from several digital publishers in selected English-speaking markets.
The videos, generally three to twenty minutes long, cover subjects including food, travel, fashion, design and entertainment.
The initiative is designed to bring more frequent, lighter viewing into an app built principally for films and television series.
Netflix is also considering whether to sell subscriptions to outside streaming services through its own interface, a model familiar from Apple and Amazon channel stores.
Peacock, NBCUniversal's streaming service, has been discussed as a possible partner, though no agreement has been announced.
The company has also been linked to preliminary interest in Letterboxd, the film-focused social platform, but no acquisition has been confirmed.
The strategic reassessment comes as Netflix develops its advertising business.
Its United States Standard with Ads plan costs $8.99 a month, and a larger mix of live, scheduled and shorter programming could create more opportunities for regular viewing and advertising inventory.
The French TF1 integration, now available to members, is the clearest live test of how far Netflix is prepared to move beyond its original streaming formula.